Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Possible Participation of Histamine H3-Receptors in the Regulation of Anaphylactic Histamine Release from Isolated Rat Peritoneal Mast Cells

27

Citations

24

References

1994

Year

Abstract

Anaphylactic histamine release from isolated rat peritoneal mast cells was concentration-dependently blocked by a 5-min treatment with exogenous histamine at 0.9 and 9 microM and enhanced by a 20- to 30-min treatment with thioperamide (H3-antagonist) at 3 microM with significance, but little affected by mepyramine (H1-antagonist) and cimetidine (H2-antagonist) at the cell concentration of 10(6) mast cells/ml. At a low concentration of mast cells (10(4) mast cells/ml), (R)-alpha-methylhistamine (alpha-MH), an H3-agonist, at 0.9-90 microM also inhibited the release in a concentration-dependent fashion. Thioperamide, but neither mepyramine nor cimetidine, significantly restored the decreased release by alpha-MH. However, the complete restoration by thioperamide could not be achieved because the drug itself slightly but concentration-dependently inhibited anaphylactic histamine release. On the other hand, not only betahistine and dimaprit but also alpha-MH did not suppress histamine release from the mast cells induced by compound 48/80. In rat plasma, considerable levels of histamine were detected. From these results, it is strongly suggested that histamine H3-like receptors are largely responsible for the negative feedback regulation of the anaphylactic histamine release from rat peritoneal mast cells.

References

YearCitations

Page 1